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We Feed People
We Feed People is a 2022 American documentary film directed by Ron Howard that chronicles how chef José Andrés and his nonprofit World Central Kitchen (WCK) rebuild nations in the wake of disaster, providing food to those affected. It had its world premiere in Austin, Texas, at the SXSW Film Festival and was released on March 19, 2022, in the U.S. and in Canada on May 19, 2022, by National Geographic Documentary Films. The film received critical acclaim and was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards at the 74th Emmy Awards.
In a conversation about the collaboration process with Emmy-nominated directors of photography Kris Kaczor, enlisted by film director Ron Howard for the film, and Sebastian Lindstrom and Alicia Sully, who for nearly twelve years had already been filming World Central Kitchen, it was clearly noted that Andrés did not want to be the focus of attention for the film. According to Lindstrom, "It's not about José, but it is about José," and had the director said that to Andrés, it would have been "No way—I don't want this to be about me." There was only one sit-down interview with Andrés, as he was resistant to being on camera and at first having a microphone attached to him.
We Feed People is a fast-paced documentary film that follows chef José Andrés, who rushes from one disaster to another, always with the same humanitarian goal—to feed people in need. The film begins with disaster footage from Hurricane Florence in the Carolinas in 2018. Then, while vacationing in the Cayman Islands, a massive earthquake strikes Haiti, where Andrés rushes with a small team.
The film features archive footage from the 2017 disaster in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, along with clips of President Trump, one of whom is doing his infamous tossing of paper towels while Andrés and his team are on the ground working to the point of physical and mental exhaustion. From further back in the archives, President Clinton is shown giving Andrés a shout-out after signing the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Act of 1996, which shields food donors from civil and criminal liability. Additional archive footage features President Biden, Craig Fergusson, David Letterman, and uncredited footage from Ferran Adrià, Bobby Flay, Martha Stewart, and Melania Trump.
For each disaster, we see Andrés and members of the NGO World Central Kitchen map the affected area and find a suitable place to build that important first kitchen to cook familiar food for the local residents. We often see Andrés attempting to enlist the aid of established organizations like the Red Cross and FEMA while his team is busy with the logistics of getting the food to the disaster area. Then, with military precision, the Chef Relief Team begins the process of branching out to set up other kitchens and dispatching to provide thousands of meals. The film also depicts the close personal relationships Andrés shares with WCK leaders like Sam Bloch.
The film also offers a personal look at Andrés, from his humble beginnings to his culinary success first in Spain and then in the United States, and at home with his supportive wife and three daughters.
On April 16, 2020, National Geographic Documentary Films announced at the Sundance Film Festival that its next feature project would be from director Ron Howard and producer Brian Grazer, founders of the production company Imagine Documentaries. It was also announced that joining them were Sara Bernstein and Justin Wilkes as producers, Michael Rosenberg and Louisa Velis as executive producers, as well as Nate Mook and Richard Wolfe from World Food Kitchen and Carolyn Bernstein and Ryan Harrington from National Geographic Documentary Films.
In an interview with producer Sara Bernstein, tapping into the nearly one thousand hours of footage already filmed by World Central Kitchen was critical due to the restraints placed on the film's production during the COVID-19 pandemic.
We Feed People
We Feed People is a 2022 American documentary film directed by Ron Howard that chronicles how chef José Andrés and his nonprofit World Central Kitchen (WCK) rebuild nations in the wake of disaster, providing food to those affected. It had its world premiere in Austin, Texas, at the SXSW Film Festival and was released on March 19, 2022, in the U.S. and in Canada on May 19, 2022, by National Geographic Documentary Films. The film received critical acclaim and was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards at the 74th Emmy Awards.
In a conversation about the collaboration process with Emmy-nominated directors of photography Kris Kaczor, enlisted by film director Ron Howard for the film, and Sebastian Lindstrom and Alicia Sully, who for nearly twelve years had already been filming World Central Kitchen, it was clearly noted that Andrés did not want to be the focus of attention for the film. According to Lindstrom, "It's not about José, but it is about José," and had the director said that to Andrés, it would have been "No way—I don't want this to be about me." There was only one sit-down interview with Andrés, as he was resistant to being on camera and at first having a microphone attached to him.
We Feed People is a fast-paced documentary film that follows chef José Andrés, who rushes from one disaster to another, always with the same humanitarian goal—to feed people in need. The film begins with disaster footage from Hurricane Florence in the Carolinas in 2018. Then, while vacationing in the Cayman Islands, a massive earthquake strikes Haiti, where Andrés rushes with a small team.
The film features archive footage from the 2017 disaster in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, along with clips of President Trump, one of whom is doing his infamous tossing of paper towels while Andrés and his team are on the ground working to the point of physical and mental exhaustion. From further back in the archives, President Clinton is shown giving Andrés a shout-out after signing the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Act of 1996, which shields food donors from civil and criminal liability. Additional archive footage features President Biden, Craig Fergusson, David Letterman, and uncredited footage from Ferran Adrià, Bobby Flay, Martha Stewart, and Melania Trump.
For each disaster, we see Andrés and members of the NGO World Central Kitchen map the affected area and find a suitable place to build that important first kitchen to cook familiar food for the local residents. We often see Andrés attempting to enlist the aid of established organizations like the Red Cross and FEMA while his team is busy with the logistics of getting the food to the disaster area. Then, with military precision, the Chef Relief Team begins the process of branching out to set up other kitchens and dispatching to provide thousands of meals. The film also depicts the close personal relationships Andrés shares with WCK leaders like Sam Bloch.
The film also offers a personal look at Andrés, from his humble beginnings to his culinary success first in Spain and then in the United States, and at home with his supportive wife and three daughters.
On April 16, 2020, National Geographic Documentary Films announced at the Sundance Film Festival that its next feature project would be from director Ron Howard and producer Brian Grazer, founders of the production company Imagine Documentaries. It was also announced that joining them were Sara Bernstein and Justin Wilkes as producers, Michael Rosenberg and Louisa Velis as executive producers, as well as Nate Mook and Richard Wolfe from World Food Kitchen and Carolyn Bernstein and Ryan Harrington from National Geographic Documentary Films.
In an interview with producer Sara Bernstein, tapping into the nearly one thousand hours of footage already filmed by World Central Kitchen was critical due to the restraints placed on the film's production during the COVID-19 pandemic.
